Murray v. Bronson

1 Dem. Sur. 217
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Dem. Sur. 217 (Murray v. Bronson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Bronson, 1 Dem. Sur. 217 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

The Surrogate.

The numerous progeny of this testator, who himself died in 1838, may be classified by generations as follows:

1st. Seven children survived him—all are now dead.
2d. Two of these seven left no child or other descendant. The other five left children, and some child or children of each of those five still live.
3d. There are also now living several grandchildren of these five children of the testator.
4th. Some of the last class have living children who are, therefore, great great grandchildren of Isaac Bronson.

Among the many descendants who are included in class 3d, are eleven persons, great grandchildren of the testator, who are children of his four deceased grandchildren, Marinus Willett, Isaac Bronson, Theodore B. Bronson and Charlotte Winthrop.

The claim of these eleven persons, to share in a portion of their ancestor’s estate which is now ready for distribution, is one of the questions at issue in this proceeding, wherein the account of the surviving trustees of a trust created .by the testator’s will is to be judicially settled and determined.

The original will was executed in 1829, and, so far as it needs to be here considered, has the following pro vis[220]*220ions: All the testator’s estate, with certain exceptions, is given upon certain specified trusts to trustees, with the direction that the same be divided, from time to time, as soon and to as large an amount as its condition may admit, among all his surviving children equally, and the issue of such as may be dead, “who are to take what the parent of such issue would be entitled to if living.”

The will then says: “ The portion which shall be divided or allotted to each of my daughters shall be designated in a deed delivered to such daughter declaring the trust, but shall remain in the possession of the trustees under this will, and be and continue her estate at law during her natural life, and the interest, rents, issues and profits only thereof shall be paid to her as they accrue during her natural life, and shall not be at the control of her husband or subject to his debts, but be to her sole and separate use; and on her decease, her portion shall be conveyed and delivered to her issue, to be and belong to such issue forever.”

“ If any of my daughters die without issue, her portion shall thereupon belong to my other children and their issue, subject to the restrictions and regulations aforesaid,”

The testator declares, in the introductory clause to his first codicil (executed in 1838, the year of his death), that he supplements his will thereby, for this reason, among others, “that the same may be more conformable to existing laws.” The meaning of this expression will be hereafter considered.

By this codicil, he provides that the interest, rents, issues and profits of that portion of the estate which shall be allotted to anyone of his daughters “shall, by said [221]*221trustees, be applied to the sole and separate use of each daughter, respectively, for whom the same is holden in trust, and shall be exempt from the Control and debts of her husband, and on receiving a receipt or discharge of any cestui que trust, executed under her hand to them, acknowledging a sum applied to her use, said trustee shall be absolved from any further obligations, in any way or manner, to pay the same sum. If any of my daughters die without issue, her portion shall thereupon belong to my surviving children in equal parts, and to the issue of such as are dead, who are to take what the parent of such issue would he entitled to if living.

A second codicil was executed in 1838, but its provisions are unimportant, so far as concerns the questions to be here determined.

Miss Mary Bronson, the last surviving child of the testator, has recently died intestate, and without issue. That portion of her father’s estate hitherto held in trust for her is now to be distributed, as well as the interest and income of such portion, which, at the time of her decease, had accumulated, in the hands of her trustees, to the amount of more than $275,000—about $75,000 more than the corpus itself.

Two questions are thus presented for determination.

First. Are the great grandchildren of Isaac Bronson, children of such <& his grandchildren as died during the life of Mary Bronson entitled to share in the corpus of this trust estate?

Second. Is the accumulated income, which has never been actually applied to the use of the cestui que trust, and is still held by the trustees, to be deemed subject, as part of the trust estate, to be distributed under the pro[222]*222visions of the will of Isaac Bronson, or did it belong absolutely to his daughter Mary at the time of her decease, and should it now be paid over to the administrator of her estate?

FIRST.

The decision of the first question depends upon the construction to be put upon the word “issue,” as that word is employed in certain clauses of the will and first codicil. This term has been a never failing source of perplexity to courts and counsel.

The tendency of judicial decisions in the last and in the early years of the present century was to hold that, wherever the troublesome word appeared in a will, unless there were manifest indications that it was meant to have a .narrower import, it was broad enough to include all descendants, to the remotest generation (See Wythe v. Thurlston, Amb., 554 [1748]; Gale v. Bennet, Amb., 681 [1768]; Haydon v. Wilshere, 3 Term Rep., 372 [1789]; Hockley v. Mawbey, 1 Ves., 143 [1790]; Davenport v. Hanbury, 3 Ves., 257 [1796]; Freeman v. Parsley, 3 Ves., 421 [1797]).

This view seems to have been somewhat modified by the decision of Sibley v. Perry (7 Ves., 522 [1802]), a case in which Lord Eldon held that the meaning of the word “issue,” as used in a clause of a will there under consideration, was cut down by other parts of the instrument, so as to take in “ children,” only. Soon after this decision, however, the doctrine was reasserted in Leigh v. Nor bury (13 Ves., 340 [1807]), that, unless limited by somo indications of a contrary intention, the word “is[223]*223sue,” when used by a testator, was as comprehensive as the word “descendants.”

A new phase of the question presented itself in Pruen v. Osborne (11 Sim., 132 [1840]). A testator provided that a certain bequest should go to A., B. and C., or such of them, to use his own language, “ as are now living, and the lawful issue now living of such of them as are dead having lawful issue, in equal shares, . . so, nevertheless, that the issue of any such . . persons ” (that is of A., B. and C.), “respectively, as are dead shall, as between themselves, take per stirpes and not per capita,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Dem. Sur. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-bronson-nysurct-1883.